|
More Photos (1):
Best Paving Asphalt Finish Roller Operators General Maintenance Technician Production and Manufacturing QUALITY MANAGER Health Care VALOR HOSPICECARE ON-CALL NURSE Driver/Transportation Winroc Corp Drivers Driver/Transportation DRIVERS General Preferred Capital Management, Inc Apartment Mgr/Maintenance at HomeGiving new life to old findsThe Dallas Morning News
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.20.2008
Bonnee Sharp has a secret. Her house, a glamorous showcase of high style, is just a facade. Turns out the entire house was decorated on a budget with family hand-me-downs, flea market finds and a hefty amount of help from the savings superstar Ikea.
"If you have something that is dowdy and yucky from your family, it can be reborn with paint and fabric," Sharp says.
"And then it's given new life when you place it next to a modern piece. That's kind of what my house is about."
Her home is full of finds: the kidney-shape coffee table she snapped up at a New York City flea market and the matching side table she found a year later at another; a Danish-modern dining set she scooped up at an estate sale; and the black-and-white photographs of East Dallas sweetgum trees that she shot herself.
Most of her ideas popped up on her lunch breaks when she was an intern, then a staff designer, at the Dallas interior-design firm of Emily Summers.
"In fact, I started my business on a lunch break. I was driving by an old knitting mill and I knocked on the door, and it turns out there was a man inside who printed fabrics. That was three years ago. It was pretty fortuitous."
The idea of recycling vintage furnishings into mellow masterpieces is what inspired Sharp's business, Studio Bon Textiles (www.studiobon.net). She designs hand-printed upholstery-weight fabrics that are crisp and contemporary while still nodding to retro style.
"I think about (designing) in my sleep. I think there's something wrong with me," she says. "I'll have an idea in my head, and I'll get up out of bed and draw."
Because her fabrics are printed locally, an early-morning idea can be made into reality the next day, which is the reason why Sharp offers 30 patterns to choose from, plus the capability to create custom fabrics for individual jobs at a moment's notice.
Now, the French slipper chairs in the living room — pink-velvet hand-me-downs from her beloved grandmother and namesake, Bonnee, a fashion illustrator and gallery owner in her day — are covered in Sharp's Bellows pattern.
And in her master bedroom, a side chair and foot stool covered in her Ellen pattern (named after her sister) sit alongside a bed donated by her parents under paintings by her grandmother.
|
|